Punctuation

1) In making the plural of figures and letters, do not use an apostrophe.

The 1990s. The three Rs Two CEUs ’90s

3) Punctuate years of college classes with an apostrophe (single closing quote).

Class of ’08 James Donaldson ’07

4) Associate’s, bachelor’s, and master’s degrees should always be written with an ’s. Never write masters’ degree or masters degree.

B. Bullets

1) In bulleted lists within text passages, the bullet is the punctuation. No other punctuation is required to separate listed items. Do not use commas or semicolons at the end of each item.

2) If an item in the bulleted list is a complete sentence, then the first word should be capped and there should be a period at the end of the sentence. If the item is a non-sentence fragment, then the first word should be lowercased, with a period placed at the end of the last item in the list.

3) Avoid mixing sentence and non-sentence items in a bulleted list.

C. Commas, semicolons, colons, periods

1) Use a comma before the words and or in a series. Do not use a comma before ‘and’ in a series. An exception would be if the following phrase is a whole sentence or complete thought.

The handbell choir, men’s glee club and women’s choir will perform on Tuesday.

2) Place a comma after digits signifying thousands, except when reference is made to temperature or to SAT scores.

4) When writing a date, place a comma between the day and the year as well as after the year.

July 4, 2007, was Independence Day. Tuesday, July 6, was sunny.

5) Do not place a comma between the month and year when the day is not mentioned.

May 2008

6) Do not use a comma before or after Jr. or Sr., and do not precede Roman numerals such as I, II, or III with a comma. (Note: This follows AP style and Chicago style preference)

Please call Mr. C.E. Crouse Jr. for the report from the board. Contact James Heidinger II for the board meeting.

Exception: In formal social documents, commas may be retained with Jr. or Sr. according to the author’s preference.

7) If a phrase is within parentheses at the end of a sentence, place the period after the closing parenthesis. If a complete sentence is in parentheses, the period should be inside the closing parenthesis.

8) No space should be used between the initials of an abbreviation or a person’s name.

C.E. Crouse

NOTE: Grammatical rules regarding punctuation are often bent for the sake of visual appeal, especially in headings or display type.

D. Dashes

1) Use an en dash or smaller dash (–) with no extra space before or after:

2) Use an em dash or larger dash (—) with no extra space before or after:

a) to denote a sudden break in thought that causes an abrupt change in sentence structure.

Consistency—that hobgoblin of little minds.

b) in defining or enumerating complementary elements.

The influence of three musicians—Mozart, Bach and Beethoven—was of great importance in his development as a musician.

c) in sentences having several elements as reference of a pronoun that is the subject of a final, summarizing clause.

Smith, Jones and McCoy—all felt groggy on humid days.E. Ellipses

1) In general, treat an ellipsis as a three-letter word, constructed with three periods and a regular space on either side of the ellipsis, as shown here ( … ).

2) When material is deleted at the end of one paragraph and at the beginning of the one that follows, place an ellipsis in both locations.

3) In writing a story, do not use ellipses at the beginning and end of direct quotes that form complete sentences.

“It has become evident to me that I no longer have a strong enough political base,” Nixon said. not “ … it has become evident to me that I no longer have a strong enough political base … ,” Nixon said.

F. Hyphens

1) Use the nonhyphenated spelling of a word if either spelling is acceptable.

2) Do not hyphenate the words vice president and words beginning with non, except those containing a proper noun.

non-German nontechnical

3) Hyphenate pre professional programs.

pre-med pre-law

4) Do not place a hyphen between the prefix sub and the word to which it is attached.

subtotal

5) Hyphenate the word X-ray and use a capital X.

6) Hyphenate part-time and full-time when used as adjectives. Hyphenate any modifying word combined with well, ill, better, best, little, lesser when used as an adjective preceding a noun. Do not hyphenate when the expression carries a modifier or when it follows a noun.

well-built engine a moderately well built engine The engine is well built.

7) Hyphenate a compound in which one component is a number and the other is a noun or adjective.

30-mile run 10-year-old child, but 10 years old 12,000-square-foot building

8) Use your dictionary to determine whether to hyphenate frequently used compound words. Note that hyphenated words can be created for the sake of clarity.

11) Watch hyphens in a body of copy. Do not use hyphenations unless absolutely necessary.G. Quotation marks

1) The titles of books, plays, movies, radio and television programs, long musical compositions, operas, pamphlets, periodicals, etc., should be italicized, while titles of book series, film series, radio and television episodes, songs, essays, lectures, and parts of volumes (chapters, titles of papers, etc.) should be placed in quotation marks. C.S. Lewis is the author of The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe. The concert band played "Joyful, Joyful, We Adore Thee."

2) Use single quotation marks for quotations printed within other quotations.

3) If several paragraphs are to be quoted, use quotation marks at the beginning of each paragraph, but at the end of the last paragraph only. No quotation marks are needed for passages set off from the text by additional space, an indent, or change of typeface.

4) Set quotation marks after periods and commas and before colons and semicolons. Exclamation points and interrogation marks that are not part of the quotation should be set outside quotation marks.

Peterson said, "Thank you for coming to the banquet."

"It was a great game," said Smith.

Kego had three objections to "Filmore’s Summer": It was contrived; the characters were flat; the dialogue was unrealistic.

The man cried, “They stole my new car!”

5) Use editor’s brackets, not parentheses, to set off editorial remarks within direct quotations.

• lay (transitive): I lay the book on the bed; past tense: I laid the book on the bed.

• lie (intransitive): I lie in bed; past tense: I lay in bed.

• less when describing an amount that cannot be counted, fewer when describing a number:

He was less agreeable to the plan than she was. Fewer than 12 students attended the seminar.

Use more than instead of over when referring to numbers. More than 50 people attending the reception. More than 1,000 students went to the basketball game.

• resume as shown here, not résumé or resumé

• theatre when referring to the department, discipline, building or a performance; Doddridge Holland Theatre, the theatre and cinema program

• workplace, not work place

• workstation, not work station

Avoid

• Passive voice: The dean appointed John Jones; not, John Jones was appointed.

• The longer of two similar words: use (not utilize), competence (not competency).

• Sexist language: Avoid using he or she where possible, and do not use he/she. Write, “The president and a representative ...” not “The president and his/her representative …” Other avoidance techniques include pluralizing he and she to they, or substituting a common noun.

• The split infinitive.

He was told to quickly process the papers. He was told to process the papers quickly. (preferred)

• The dangling participle.

Straddling the Arizona–New Mexico border, the archaeologist found a string of ancient pueblo ruins. (Was the archaeologist straddling the border?)

The archaeologist found a string of ancient pueblo ruins straddling the Arizona–New Mexico border. (better)